Parallel processing of data  for an untrusted application

ABSTRACT

An untrusted application is received at a data center including one or more processing modules and providing a native processing environment. The untrusted application includes a data parallel pipeline. Secured processing environments are used to execute the untrusted application.

CLAIM OF PRIORITY

This application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 14/528,908, filed Oct. 30, 2014, which is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 12/959,022, filed Dec. 2, 2010, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/331,148, filed on May 4, 2010, the contents of each are hereby incorporated by reference.

TECHNICAL FIELD

This disclosure relates to parallel processing of data.

BACKGROUND

Large-scale data processing may include parallel processing, which generally involves performing some operation over each element of a large data set. The various operations may be chained together in a data-parallel pipeline to create an efficient mechanism for processing a data set.

SUMMARY

In one aspect, an untrusted application is received at a data center including one or more processing modules and providing a native processing environment. The untrusted application includes a data parallel pipeline. The data parallel pipeline specifies multiple parallel data objects that contain multiple elements and multiple parallel operations that are associated with untrusted functions that operate on the elements. A first secured processing environment is instantiated in the native processing environment and on one or more of the processing modules. The untrusted application is executed in the first secured processing environment. Executing the application generates a dataflow graph of deferred parallel data objects and deferred parallel operations corresponding to the data parallel pipeline. Information representing the data flow graph is communicated outside of the first secured processing environment. Outside of the first secured processing environment and in the native processing environment, one or more graph transformations are applied to the information representing the dataflow graph to generate a revised dataflow graph that includes one or more of the deferred parallel data objects and deferred, combined parallel data operations that are associated with one or more of the untrusted functions. The deferred, combined parallel operations are executed to produce materialized parallel data objects corresponding to the deferred parallel data objects. Executing the deferred, combined parallel operations includes instantiating one or more second secured processing environments in the native processing environment and on one or more of the processing modules and executing the untrusted functions associated with the deferred, combined parallel operations in the one or more second secured processing environments.

Implementations may include one or more of the following features. For example, the first secured processing environment may include a first virtual machine and the one or more second secured processing environments may include a second virtual machine. The first virtual machine and the one or more second virtual machines may be hardware virtual machines. Executing the untrusted functions associated with the deferred, combined parallel operations in the one or more second secured processing environments may include communicating an input batch of records into the second secured processing environment from outside of the second secured processing environment, the input batch of records including multiple, individual input records; executing at least one of the untrusted functions associated with the deferred, combined parallel operations on each of the individual records in the input batch to generate output records; collecting the output records into an output batch; and communicating the output batch outside of the second secured processing environment.

An output of the untrusted application may be sent to a client system that sent the untrusted application to the data center. Communicating the information representing the data flow graph outside of the first secured processing environment may include communicating the information representing the data flow graph to an execute graph service outside of the first secured processing environment.

The deferred, combined parallel data operations may include at least one generalized mapreduce operation. The generalized mapreduce operation may include multiple, parallel map operations and multiple, parallel reduce operations and being translatable to a single mapreduce operation that includes a single map function to implement the multiple, parallel map operations and a single reduce function to implement the multiple, parallel reduce operations. The single map function and the single reduce function may include one or more of the untrusted functions.

Executing the deferred, combined parallel operations may include translating the combined mapreduce operation to the single mapreduce operation. Executing the untrusted functions associated with the deferred, combined parallel operations in the one or more second secured processing environments may include executing the single map function and the single reduce function in the one or more second secured processing environments.

Executing the untrusted application in the secured processing environment may include executing the untrusted application within a virtual machine in the first secured processing environment. Executing the untrusted functions associated with the deferred, combined parallel operations in the one or more secured processing environments may include executing the untrusted functions associated with the deferred, combined parallel operations in a virtual machine within the one or more second secured processing environments.

Communicating information representing the data flow graph outside of the first secured processing environment may include communicating information representing the data flow graph outside of the first secured processing environment using a remote procedure call. The remote procedure call may be audited.

In another aspect, a system includes one or more processing modules configured to provide native processing environment and to implement a first secured processing environment in the native processing environment, a service located outside of the first secured processing environment and in the native processing environment, and one or more second secured processing environments in the native processing environment.

The first secured processing environment configured to execute an untrusted application that includes a data parallel pipeline. The data parallel pipeline specifies multiple parallel data objects that contain multiple elements and multiple parallel operations that are associated with untrusted functions that operate on the elements. Executing the application generates a dataflow graph of deferred parallel data objects and deferred parallel operations corresponding to the data parallel pipeline. The first secured processing environment is also configured to communicate information representing the data flow graph outside of the first secured processing environment;

The service is configured to receive the information representing the data flow graph from the first secured processing environment, apply one or more graph transformations to the information representing the dataflow graph to generate a revised dataflow graph that includes one or more of the deferred parallel data objects and deferred, combined parallel data operations that are associated with one or more of the untrusted functions, and cause execution of the deferred, combined parallel operations to produce materialized parallel data objects corresponding to the deferred parallel data objects.

The one or more second secured processing environments are configured to execute the untrusted functions associated with the deferred, combined parallel operations to result in execution of the deferred, combined parallel operations.

Implementations may include one or more of the following features. For example, the first secured processing environment may include a first virtual machine and the one or more second secured processing environments may include a second virtual machine. The first virtual machine and the one or more second virtual machines may be hardware virtual machines.

The one or more processing devices may be configured to implement a worker configured to communicate an input batch of records into the second secured processing environment from outside of the second secured processing environment. The input batch of records may include multiple, individual input records. To execute the untrusted functions associated with the deferred, combined parallel operations, the one or more second secured processing environments may be configured to execute at least one of the untrusted functions associated with the deferred, combined parallel operations on each of the individual records in the input batch to generate output records; collect the output records into an output batch; and communicate the output batch to the worker.

The system may include a client system configured to receive an output of the untrusted application. The deferred, combined parallel data operations may include at least one generalized mapreduce operation. The generalized mapreduce operation may include multiple, parallel map operations and multiple, parallel reduce operations and be translatable to a single mapreduce operation that includes a single map function to implement the multiple, parallel map operations and a single reduce function to implement the multiple, parallel reduce operations. The single map function and the single reduce function may include one or more of the untrusted functions.

The service may be configured to translate the combined mapreduce operation to the single mapreduce operation. The one or more second secured processing environments may be configured to execute the single map function and the single reduce function in the one or more second secured processing environments.

The first secured processing environment may be configured to execute the untrusted application within a virtual machine in the first secured processing environment. The one or more second secured processing environments may be configured to execute the untrusted functions associated with the deferred, combined parallel operations in a virtual machine within the one or more second secured processing environments.

In another aspect, information representing a dataflow graph of deferred parallel data objects and deferred parallel operations is accessed. The deferred parallel data objects and deferred parallel operations correspond to parallel data objects and parallel operations specified by a data parallel pipeline included in an untrusted application. The parallel data objects contain multiple elements and the parallel operations are associated with untrusted functions that operate on the elements. One or more graph transformations are applied to the information representing the dataflow graph to generate a revised dataflow graph that includes one or more of the deferred parallel data objects and deferred, combined parallel data operations that are associated with one or more of the untrusted functions. The deferred, combined parallel operations are executed to produce materialized parallel data objects corresponding to the deferred parallel data objects. Executing the deferred, combined parallel operations includes instantiating one or more secured processing environments and executing the untrusted functions associated with the deferred, combined parallel operations in the one or more secured processing environments.

The untrusted application that includes the data parallel pipeline may be received and an initial secured processing environment may be instantiated. The untrusted application may be executed in the initial secured processing environment. Executing the application may generate the dataflow graph of deferred parallel data objects and deferred parallel operations. The information representing the data flow graph may be communicated outside of the initial secured processing environment such that the graph transformations are applied to the information representing the dataflow graph outside of the initial secured processing environment. The one or more secured processing environments may include a virtual machine.

Implementations of the described techniques may include hardware, a system, a method or process, or computer software on a computer-accessible medium.

The details of one or more implementations are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other features will be apparent from the description and drawings, and from the claims.

DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is a block diagram illustrating an example of a datacenter.

FIG. 2 is a block diagram of an example of a processing module.

FIG. 3 is a block diagram illustrating an example of a pipeline library.

FIG. 4A is a flow chart illustrating an example of a process that may be performed by an evaluator, an optimizer, and an executor of the pipeline library.

FIG. 4B is a flow chart illustrating an example of a process that may be performed by the executor of the pipeline library.

FIGS. 5A and 5B show an example dataflow graph transformation that illustrates ParallelDo producer-consumer fusion and sibling fusion.

FIGS. 6A and 6B show an example dataflow graph transformation that illustrates MSCR fusion.

FIGS. 7A-7E illustrate an example of a dataflow graph transformation performed to generate a final dataflow graph.

FIG. 8 illustrates an example of an MSCR operation with 3 input channels.

FIG. 9 illustrates an example of a system that may be used to implement the pipeline library as a service.

FIG. 10 is a flow chart illustrating an example of a process for executing an untrusted application that includes a data parallel pipeline.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

In general, the techniques described in this document can be applied to large-scale data processing and, in particular, to large scale data-parallel pipelines. Such large-scale processing may be performed in a distributed data processing system, such as a datacenter or a network of datacenters. For example, large-scale Internet services and the massively parallel computing infrastructure that support such services may employ warehouse-sized computing systems, made up of thousands or tens of thousands of computing nodes.

FIG. 1 is a block diagram illustrating an example of a datacenter 100. The datacenter 100 is used to store data, perform computational tasks, and transmit data to other systems outside of the datacenter using, for example, a network connected to the datacenter. In particular, the datacenter 100 may perform large-scale data processing on massive amounts of data.

The datacenter 100 includes multiple racks 102. While only two racks are shown, the datacenter 100 may have many more racks. Each rack 102 can include a frame or cabinet into which components, such as processing modules 104, are mounted. In general, each processing module 104 can include a circuit board, such as a motherboard, on which a variety of computer-related components are mounted to perform data processing. The processing modules 104 within each rack 102 are interconnected to one another through, for example, a rack switch, and the racks 102 within each datacenter 100 are also interconnected through, for example, a datacenter switch.

In some implementations, the processing modules 104 may each take on a role as a master or slave. The master modules control scheduling and data distribution tasks amongst themselves and the slaves. A rack can include storage (e.g., one or more network attached disks) that is shared by the one or more processing modules 104 and/or each processing module 104 may include its own storage. Additionally, or alternatively, there may be remote storage connected to the racks through a network.

The datacenter 100 may include dedicated optical links or other dedicated communication channels, as well as supporting hardware, such as modems, bridges, routers, switches, wireless antennas and towers, and the like. The datacenter 100 may include one or more wide area networks (WANs) as well as multiple local area networks (LANs).

FIG. 2 is a block diagram of an example of a processing module 200, which may be used for one or more of the processing modules 104. The processing module 200 includes memory 202, one or more processing units (CPUs) 204, and one or more network or other communication interfaces 206. These components are interconnected by one or more communication buses. In some implementations, the processing module 200 may include an input/output (I/O) interface connecting the processing module to input and output devices such as a display and a keyboard. Memory 202 may include high speed random access memory and may also include non-volatile memory, such as one or more magnetic disk storage devices. Memory 202 may include mass storage that is remotely located from the CPU 204.

The memory 202 stores application software 202 a, a mapreduce library 202 b, a pipeline library 202 c, and an operating system 202 d (e.g., Linux). The operating system 202 d generally includes procedures for handling various basic system services and for performing hardware dependent tasks. The application software 202 a performs large-scale data processing.

The libraries 202 b and 202 c provide functions and classes that may be employed by the application software 202 a to perform large-scale data processing and implement data-parallel pipelines in such large-scale data processing. The mapreduce library 202 b can support the MapReduce programming model for processing massive amounts of data in parallel. The MapReduce model is described in, for example, MapReduce: Simplified Data Processing on Large Clusters, OSDI'04: Sixth Symposium on Operating System Design and Implementation, San Francisco, Calif., December, 2004 and U.S. Pat. No. 7,650,331, both of which are incorporated by reference.

In general, the MapReduce model provides an abstraction to application developers for how to think about their computations. The application developers can formulate their computations according to the abstraction, which can simplify the building of programs to perform large-scale parallel-data processing. The application developers can employ the MapReduce model with or without using the mapreduce library 202 b. The mapreduce library 202 b, however, can manage many of the difficult low-level tasks. Such low-level tasks may include, for example, selecting appropriate parallel worker machines, distributing to them the program to run, managing the temporary storage and flow of intermediate data between the three phases, synchronizing the overall sequencing of the phases, and coping with transient failures of machines, networks, and software.

The MapReduce model generally involves breaking computations down into a mapreduce operation, which includes a single map operation and a single reduce operation. The map operation performs an operation on each of the logical records in the input to compute a set of intermediate key/value pairs. The reduce operation performs an operation on the values that share the same key to combine the values in some manner. Implicit in this model is a shuffle operation, which involves grouping all of the values with the same key.

The mapreduce library 202 b may implement a map phase, a shuffle phase, and a reduce phase to support computations formulated according to the MapReduce model. In some implementations, to use the mapreduce library 202 b, a user program (or another library, such as pipeline library 202 c) calls the mapreduce library 202 b, specifying information identifying the input file(s), information identifying or specifying the output files to receive output data, and two application-specific data processing operators, the map operator and the reduce operator. Generally, the map operator specifies a map function that processes the input data to produce intermediate data and the reduce operator specifies a reduce function that merges or otherwise combines the intermediate data values. The mapreduce library 202 b then employs this information to implement that map phase, the shuffle phase, and the reduce phase.

The map phase starts by reading a collection of values or key/value pairs from an input source, such as a text file, binary record-oriented file, or MySql database. Large data sets may be represented by multiple, even thousands, of files (which may be referred to as shards), and multiple file shards can be read as a single logical input source. The map phase then invokes the user-defined function, the map function or Mapper, on each element, independently and in parallel. For each input element, the user-defined function emits zero or more key/value pairs, which are the outputs of the map phase.

The shuffle phase takes the key/value pairs emitted by the Mappers and groups together all the key/value pairs with the same key. The shuffle phase then outputs each distinct key and a stream of all the values with that key to the next phase, the reduce phase.

The reduce phase takes the key-grouped data emitted by the shuffle phase and invokes the user-defined function, the reduce function or Reducer, on each distinct key-and-values group, independently and in parallel. Each Reducer invocation is passed a key and an iterator over all the values associated with that key, and emits zero or more replacement values to associate with the input key. The Reducer typically performs some kind of aggregation over all the values with a given key. For some operations, the Reducer is just the identity function. The key/value pairs emitted from all the Reducer calls are then written to an output sink, e.g., a sharded file or database.

To implement these phases, the mapreduce library 202 b may divide the input pieces into M pieces (for example, into 64 megabyte (MB) sized files) and start up multiple copies of the program that uses the library 202 b on a cluster of machines, such as multiple ones of the processing modules 104. One of the copies may be a master copy and the rest may be worker copies that are assigned work by the master. The master selects idle workers and assigns each one a map task or a reduce task. There are M map tasks (one for each input piece). The workers assigned to a map task use the Mapper to perform the mapping operation on the inputs to produce the intermediate results, which are divided, for example, into R sets. When the intermediate results are divided into R sets, there are R reduce tasks to assign. The workers assigned to a reduce task use the Reducer to perform the reduce operation on the intermediate values to produce the output. Once all map tasks and all reduce tasks are completed, the master returns to the user program or library employing the mapreduce library 202 b. As a result, the mapreduce operation is implemented as a set of parallel operations across a cluster of processing devices.

For Reducers that first combine all the values with a given key using an associative, commutative operation, a separate user-defined Combiner function can be specified to perform partial combining of values associated with a given key during the map phase. Each map worker can keep a cache of key/value pairs that have been emitted from the Mapper, and use the Combiner function to combine locally as much as possible before sending the combined key/value pairs on to the Shuffle phase. The Reducer may complete the combining step by combining values from different map workers.

By default, the Shuffle phase may send each key-and-values group to arbitrarily but deterministically chosen reduce worker machine, with this choice determining which output file shard will hold that key's results. Alternatively, a user defined Sharder function can be specified that selects which reduce worker machine should receive the group for a given key. A user-defined Sharder can be used to aid in load balancing. The user-defined Sharder can also be used to sort the output keys into reduce “buckets,” with all the keys of the i_(th) reduce worker being ordered before all the keys of the i_(th)+1st reduce worker. Coupled with the fact that each reduce worker processes keys in lexicographic order, this kind of Sharder can be used to produce sorted output.

The pipeline library 202 c provides functions and classes that support data-parallel pipelines and, in particular, pipelines that include chains or directed acyclic graphs of mapreduce operations. The pipeline library 202 c may help alleviate some of the burdens of implementing chains of mapreduce operations. In general, many real-world computations require a chain of mapreduce stages. While some logical computations can be expressed as a mapreduce operation, others require a sequence or graph of mapreduce operations. As the complexity of the logical computations grows, the challenge of mapping the computations into physical sequences of mapreduce operations increases. Higher-level concepts such as “count the number of occurrences” or “join tables by key” are generally hand-compiled into lower-level mapreduce operations. In addition, the user may take on the additional burdens of writing a driver program to invoke the mapreduce operations in the proper sequence, and managing the creation and deletion of intermediate files holding the data.

The pipeline library 202 c may obviate or reduce some of the difficulty in producing data-parallel pipelines that involve multiple mapreduce operations, as well as the need for the developer to produce additional coordination code to chain together the separate mapreduce stages in such data-parallel pipelines. The pipeline library 202 c also may obviate or reduce additional work to manage the creation and later deletion of the intermediate results in between pipeline stages. As a result, the pipeline library 202 c may help prevent the logical computation itself from becoming hidden among all the low-level coordination details, thereby making it easier for new developers to understand the computation. Moreover, making use of the pipeline library 202 c may help prevent the division of the pipeline into particular stages from becoming “baked in” to the code and difficult to change later if the logical computation needs to evolve.

In general, the application software 202 a may employ one or both of the libraries 202 b or 202 c. An application developer may develop application software that employs the mapreduce library 202 b to perform computations formulated as a mapreduce operation.

The application developer may alternatively, or additionally, employ the pipeline library 202 c when developing a data-parallel pipeline that includes multiple mapreduce operations. As discussed further below, the pipeline library 202 c may allow the developer to code the computations in a more natural manner, using the native programming language in which the pipeline library 202 c is implemented, without thinking about casting the logical computation in terms of mapreduce operations or building an ordered graph of operations. The pipeline library 202 c can formulate the logical computation in terms of multiple mapreduce operations prior to execution, and then execute the computation either by implementing the mapreduce operations itself, or interfacing with the mapreduce library 202 b to implement the mapreduce operations.

FIG. 3 is a block diagram illustrating an example of a pipeline library 300 that may be used to implement pipeline library 200 c. The pipeline library 300 includes one or more parallel data collection classes 302, one or more parallel operations 304, an evaluator 306, an optimizer 308, and an executor 310. In general, the parallel data collection classes 302 are used to instantiate parallel data objects that hold a collection of data, and the parallel operations 304 are used to perform parallel operations on the data held by the parallel data objects. The parallel operations 304 may be composed to implement data-parallel computations and an entire pipeline, or even multiple pipelines, can be implemented using the parallel collection classes 302 and parallel operations 304.

Parallel data collection classes 302 and operations 304 present a simple, high-level, uniform abstraction over many different data representations and over different execution strategies. The parallel data collection classes 302 abstract away the details of how data is represented, including whether the data is represented as an in-memory data structure, as one or more files, or as an external storage service. Similarly, parallel operations 304 abstract away their implementation strategy, such as whether an operation is implemented as a local, sequential loop, as a remote parallel invocation of the mapreduce library 202 b, as a query on a database, or as a streaming computation.

Rather than evaluate the parallel operations as they are traversed when the data parallel pipeline is executed, the evaluator 306 defers the evaluation of parallel operations. Instead, the evaluator 306 constructs an internal execution plan dataflow graph that contains the operations and their arguments. Once the execution plan dataflow graph for the whole logical computation is constructed, the optimizer 308 revises the execution plan, for example, by applying graph transformations that fuse or combine chains of parallel operations together into a smaller number of combined operations. The revised execution plan may include a generalized mapreduce operation that includes multiple, parallel map operations and multiple, parallel reduce operations (for example, the MapShuffleCombineReduce operation described further below), but which can be translated to a single mapreduce operation with a single map function to implement the multiple map operations and a single reduce function to implement the multiple reduce operations. The executor 310 executes the revised operations using underlying primitives (e.g., MapReduce operations). When running the execution plan, the executor 310 may choose which strategy to use to implement each operation (e.g., local sequential loop vs. remote parallel MapReduce) based in part on the size of the data being processed. The executor 310 also may place remote computations near the data on which they operate, and may perform independent operations in parallel. The executor 310 also may manage the creation and cleanup of any intermediate files needed within the computation.

The pipeline library 300 may be implemented in any of a number of programming languages. The following describes examples of aspects of an implementation in the Java® programming language.

The pipeline library 300 provides a parallel data collection class referred to as a PCollection<T>, which is an immutable bag of elements of type T. A PCollection can either have a well-defined order (called a sequence), or the elements can be unordered (called a collection). Because they are less constrained, collections may be more efficient to generate and process than sequences. A PCollection<T> can be created by reading a file in one of several possible formats. For example, a text file can be read as a PCollection<String>, and a binary record-oriented file can be read as a PCollection<T>, given a specification of how to decode each binary record into an object of type T. When the pipeline library 300 is implemented using Java®, a PCollection<T> may also be created from an in-memory Java® Collection<T>.

Data sets represented by multiple file shards can be read in as a single logical PCollection. For example:

PCollection<String> lines=readTextFileCollection(“/gfs/data/shakes/hamlet.txt”);

PCollection<DocInfo> docInfos=readRecordFileCollection(“/gfs/webdocinfo/part-*”, recordsOf(DocInfo.class));

In this example, recordsOf( . . . ) specifies a particular way in which a DocInfo instance is encoded as a binary record. Other predefined encoding specifiers may include strings( ) for UTF-8-encoded text, ints( ) for a variable-length encoding of 32-bit integers, and pairsOf(e1,e2) for an encoding of pairs derived from the encodings of the components. Some implementations may allow users to specify their own custom encodings.

A second parallel data collection class 302 is PTable<K,V>, which represents an (immutable) multi-map with keys of type K and values of type V. PTable<K,V> may be just an unordered bag of pairs. Some of the parallel operations 304 may apply only to PCollections of pairs, and in Java® PTable<K,V> may be implemented as a subclass of PCollection<Pair<K,V>> to capture this abstraction. In another language, PTable<K,V> might be defined as a type synonym of PCollection<Pair<K,V>>.

The parallel data objects, such as PCollections, may be implemented as first class objects of the native language in which the library 300 is implemented. When this is the case, the objects may be manipulable like other objects in the native language. For example, the PCollections may be able to be passed into and returned from regular methods in the language, and may be able to be stored in other data structures of the language (although some implementations may prevent the PCollections from being stored in other PCollections). Also, regular control flow constructs of the native language may be able to be used to define computations involving objects, including functions, conditionals, and loops. For example, if Java® is the native language:

Collection<PCollection<T2>> pcs = new ArrayList<...>( ); for (Task task : tasks) { PCollection<T1> p1 = ...; PCollection<T2> p2; if (isFirstKind(task)) { p2 = doSomeWork(p1); } else { p2 = doSomeOtherWork(p1); } pcs.add(p2); }

Implementing the parallel data objects as first class objects in the native language of the library 300 may simplify the development of programs using the library, since the developer can use the parallel data objects in the same manner he or she would use other objects.

In addition to the parallel data collection classes, the pipeline library 300 can also include a single data collection class PObject<T> to support the ability to inspect the contents of PCollections during the execution of a pipeline. In contrast to a PCollection, which holds multiple elements, a PObject<T> is a container for a single object of type T (for example, a single native object (e.g., Java® object) of type T) and any associated methods of PObjects are designed to operate on a single element. Like PCollections, PObjects can be either deferred or materialized (as described further below), allowing them to be computed as results of deferred operations in pipelines. Once a pipeline is run, the contents of a now-materialized PObject can be extracted using getValue( ).

For example, in an implementation using Java®, an asSequentialCollection( ) operation can be applied to a PCollection<T> to yield a PObject<Collection<T>>, which can be inspected once the pipeline runs to read out all the elements of the computed PCollection as a regular Java® in-memory Collection:

PTable<String,Integer> wordCounts = ...; PObject<Collection<Pair<String,Integer>>> result = wordCounts.asSequentialCollection( ); ... FlumeJava.run( ); for (Pair<String,Integer> count : result.getValue( )) { System.out.print(count.first + “: ” + count.second); }

As another example, the combine( ) operation (described below) applied to a PCollection<T> and a combining function over Ts yields a PObject<T> representing the fully combined result. Global sums and maxima can be computed this way.

The contents of PObjects also may be able to be examined within the execution of a pipeline, for example, using an operate( ) primitive provided by the pipeline library 300. The operate( ) primitive takes a list of PObjects and an argument OperateFn (which defines the operation to be performed on each PObject), and returns a list of PObjects. When evaluated, operate( ) extracts the contents of the now-materialized argument PObjects, and passes them into the argument OperateFn. The OperateFn returns a list of native objects, such as Java® objects, and operate( ) wraps these native objects inside of PObjects, which are returned as the results. Using this primitive, arbitrary computations can be embedded within a pipeline and executed in deferred fashion. In other words, operations other than ParallelDo operations (described below), which operate on PCollections that contain multiple elements, can be included in the pipeline. For example, consider embedding a call to an external service that reads and writes files:

// Compute the URLs to crawl: PCollection<URL> urlsToCrawl = ...; // Crawl them, via an external service: PObject<String> fileOfUrlsToCrawl = urlsToCrawl.viewAsFile(TEXT); PObject<String> fileOfCrawledDocs = operate(fileOfUrlsToCrawl, new OperateFn( ) { String operate(String fileOfUrlsToCrawl) { return crawlUrls(fileOfUrlsToCrawl); } }); PCollection<DocInfo> docInfos = readRecordFileCollection(fileOfCrawledDocs, recordsOf(DocInfo.class)); // Use the crawled documents.

This example uses operations for converting between PCollections and PObjects containing file names. The viewAsFile( ) operation applied to a PCollection and a file format choice yields a PObject<String> containing the name of a temporary sharded file of the chosen format where the PCollection's contents may be found during execution of the pipeline. File-reading operations such as readRecordFileCollection( ) may be overloaded to allow reading files whose names are contained in PObjects.

In much the same way, the contents of PObjects can also be examined inside a DoFn (described below) by passing them in as side inputs to parallelDo( ). Normally, a DoFn performs an operation on each element of a PCollection, and just receives the PCollection as an input. In some cases, the operation on each PCollection may involve a value or other data stored in a PObject. In this case, the DoFn may receive the PCollection as an input, as normal, and a PObject as a side input. When the pipeline is run and the parallelDo( ) operation is eventually evaluated, the contents of any now-materialized PObject side inputs are extracted and provided to the user's DoFn, and then the DoFn is invoked on each element of the input PCollection to perform the defined operation on the element using the data from the PObject(s). For example:

PCollection<Integer> values = ...; PObject<Integer> pMaxValue = values.combine(MAX_INTS); PCollection<DocInfo> docInfos = ...; PCollection<Strings> results = docInfos.parallelDo( pMaxValue, new DoFn<DocInfo,String>( ) { private int maxValue; void setSideInputs(Integer maxValue) { this.maxValue = maxValue; } void process(DocInfo docInfo, EmitFn<String> emitFn) { ... use docInfo and maxValue ... } }, collectionOf(strings( )));

As described above, data-parallel operations 304 are invoked on parallel data objects, such as PCollections. The pipeline library 300 defines some primitive data-parallel operations, with other operations being implemented in terms of these primitives. One of the data-parallel primitives is parallelDo( ), which supports elementwise computation over an input PCollection<T> to produce a new output PCollection<S>. This operation takes as its main argument a DoFn<T, S>, a function-like object defining how to map each value in the input PCollection<T> into zero or more values to appear in the output PCollection<S>. This operation also takes an indication of the kind of PCollection or PTable to produce as a result. For example:

PCollection<String> words = lines.parallelDo(new DoFn<String,String>( ) { void process(String line, EmitFn<String> emitFn) { for (String word : splitIntoWords(line)) { emitFn.emit(word); } } }, collectionOf(strings( )));

In this code, collectionOf(strings( )) specifies that the parallelDo( ) operation should produce an unordered PCollection whose String elements should be encoded using UTF-8. Other options may include sequenceOf(elemEncoding) for ordered PCollections and tableOf(keyEncoding, valueEncoding) for PTables. emitFn is a call-back function passed to the user's process( . . . ) method, which should invoke emitFn.emit(outElem) for each outElem that should be added to the output PCollection. Subclasses of DoFn may be included, such as MapFn (implementing a map) and FilterFn (implementing a filter) to provide simpler interfaces in some cases.

The operation parallelDo( ) can be used to express both the map and reduce parts of a MapReduce operation. The library 300 also may include a version of parallelDo( ) that allows multiple output PCollections to be produced simultaneously from a single traversal of the input PCollection.

DoFn functions may be prevented from accessing any global mutable state of the enclosing program if DoFn functions can be distributed remotely and run in parallel. DoFn objects may be able to maintain local instance variable state, but there may be multiple DoFn replicas operating concurrently with no shared state.

A second primitive, groupByKey( ), converts a multimap of type PTable<K,V> (which can have many key/value pairs with the same key) into a uni-map of type PTable<K, Collection<V>> where each key maps to an unordered collection of all the values with that key. For example, the following computes a table mapping URLs to the collection of documents that link to them:

PTable<URL,DocInfo> backlinks = docInfos.parallelDo(new DoFn<DocInfo, Pair<URL,DocInfo>>( ) { void process(DocInfo docInfo, EmitFn<Pair<URL,DocInfo>> emitFn) { for (URL targetUrl : docInfo.getLinks( )) { emitFn.emit(Pair.of(targetUrl, docInfo)); } } }, tableOf(recordsOf(URL.class), recordsOf(DocInfo.class))); PTable<URL, Collection<DocInfo>> referringDocInfos = backlinks.groupByKey( );

The operation groupByKey( ) corresponds to the shuffle step of MapReduce. There may also be a variant that allows specifying a sorting order for the collection of values for each key.

A third primitive, combineValues( ) takes an input PTable<K, Collection<V>> and an associative combining function on Vs, and returns a PTable<K,V> where each input collection of values has been combined into a single output value. For example:

PTable<String,Integer> wordsWithOnes = words.parallelDo( new DoFn<String, Pair<String,Integer>>( ) { void process(String word, EmitFn<Pair<String,Integer>> emitFn) { emitFn.emit(Pair.of(word, 1)); } }, tableOf(strings( ), ints( ))); PTable<String,Collection<Integer>> groupedWordsWithOnes = wordsWithOnes.groupByKey( ); PTable<String,Integer> wordCounts = groupedWordsWithOnes.combineValues(SUM_INTS);

The operation combineValues( ) is semantically a special case of parallelDo( ), but the associativity of the combining function allows the operation to be implemented through a combination of a MapReduce Combiner (which runs as part of each mapper) and a MapReduce Reducer (to finish the combining), which may be more efficient than doing all the combining in the reducer.

A fourth primitive, flatten( ), takes a list of PCollection<T>s and returns a single PCollection<T> that contains all the elements of the input PCollections. The operation flatten( ) may not actually copy the inputs, but rather just view the inputs as if the inputs were one logical PCollection.

A pipeline typically concludes with operations that write the final resulting PCollections to external storage. For example:

wordCounts.writeToRecordFileTable(“/gfs/data/shakes/hamlet-counts.records”);

The pipeline library 300 may include a number of other operations on PCollections that are derived in terms of the above-described primitives. These derived operations may be the same as helper functions the user could write. For example, a count( ) operation takes a PCollection<T> and returns a PTable<T,Integer> mapping each distinct element of the input PCollection to the number of times the element occurs. This function may be implemented in terms of parallelDo( ), groupByKey( ), and combineValues( ), using the same pattern as was used to compute wordCounts above. The code above can be simplified to the following:

PTable<String,Integer> wordCounts=words.count( );

Another operation, join( ), implements a join over two or more PTables sharing a common key type. When applied to a multimap PTable<K,V1> and a multimap PTable<K,V2>, join( ) returns a unimap PTable<K, Pair<Collection<V1>, Collection<V2>>> that maps each key in either of the input tables to the collection of all values with that key in the first table, and the collection of all values with that key in the second table. This resulting table can be processed further to compute a traditional inner or outer-join, but it may be more efficient to be able to manipulate the value collections directly without computing their cross-product.

The operation join( ) may be implemented as follows:

1. Apply parallelDo( ) to each input PTable<K,Vi> to convert it into a common format of type PTable<K, TaggedUnion<V1,V2>>.

2. Combine the tables using flatten( ).

3. Apply groupByKey( ) to the flattened table to produce a PTable<K, Collection<TaggedUnion<V1,V2>>>.

4. Apply parallelDo( ) to the key-grouped table, converting each Collection<TaggedUnion<V1,V2>> into a Pair of a Collection<V1> and a Collection<V2>.

Another derived operation is top( ), which takes a comparison function and a count N and returns the greatest N elements of its receiver PCollection according to the comparison function. This operation may be implemented on top of parallelDo( ), groupByKey( ), and combineValues( ).

The operations mentioned above to read multiple file shards as a single PCollection are derived operations too, implemented using flatten( ) and the single-file read primitives.

As described above, the pipeline library 300 executes parallel operations lazily, using deferred evaluation. To that end, the evaluator 306 defers the evaluation of parallel operations, and instead constructs an internal execution plan dataflow graph that contains the operations and the arguments of the operations. Each parallel data object, such as a PCollection, is represented internally either in deferred (not yet computed) or materialized (computed) state. A deferred parallel data object, for example, holds a pointer to the deferred operation that computes the parallel data object. A deferred operation, in turn, may hold references to the parallel data objects that are the arguments of the deferred operation (which may themselves be deferred or materialized) and the deferred parallel data objects that are the results of the operation. When a library operation like parallelDo( ) is called, the library 300 creates a ParallelDo deferred operation object and returns a new deferred PCollection that points to the operation. In other words, as the data parallel pipeline is executed, the evaluator 306 converts the parallel data objects and parallel operations into a directed acyclic graph of deferred (unevaluated) objects and operations. This graph may be referred to as the execution plan or execution plan dataflow graph.

The optimizer 308 fuses chains or subgraphs of parallel operations in the dataflow graph together into a smaller number of operations (some of which may be combined operations), which the executor 310 can then execute using an underlying primitive or other logic. The optimizer 308 may be written, for example, as a series of independent graph transformations. In one implementation, the optimizer 308 performs a series of passes over the initial execution plan that reduces the number of overall operations and groups operations, with the overall goal of producing the fewest Map ShuffleCombineReduce (MSCR) operations.

An MSCR operation includes a combination of ParallelDo, GroupByKey, CombineValues, and Flatten operations. An MSCR operation can be mapped to and run as a single mapreduce operation. An MSCR operation has M input channels (each performing a map operation) and R output channels (each performing a shuffle, a combine, and a reduce). Each input channel m takes a PCollection<T_(m)> as input and performs an R-output ParallelDo “map” operation on that input to produce R outputs of type PTable<K_(r),V_(r)>s. Each output channel R flattens its M inputs and then either (a) performs a GroupByKey “shuffle,” an optional CombineValues “combine,” and a O_(r)-output ParallelDo “reduce” (which defaults to the identity operation), and then writes the results to O_(r) output PCollections or (b) writes the input directly as the output. The former kind of output channel may be referred to as a “grouping” channel, while the latter kind of output channel may be referred to as a “pass-through” channel. A pass-through channel may allow the output of a mapper be a result of an MSCR operation.

FIG. 8 illustrates an example of an MSCR operation 800 with 3 input channels 802 a, 802 b, and 802 c. The first input channel 802 a performs a ParallelDo M1 804 a. The second input channel 802 b performs a ParallelDo M2 804 b. The third input channel 802 c performs a ParallelDo M3 804 c. The MSCR operation includes two grouping output channels 806 a and 806 b. The first grouping output channel 806 a includes a GroupByKey GBK1 808 a, CombineValues CV1 810 a, and a reducing ParallelDo R1 812 a. Similarly, the second grouping output channel includes a GroupByKey GBK2 808 b, CombineValues CV2 810 b, and a reducing ParallelDo R2 812 b. The MSCR operation 800 also includes one pass-through output channel 814.

MSCR generalizes the MapReduce model by allowing multiple mappers and multiple reducers and combiners, by allowing each reducer to produce multiple outputs, by removing the requirement that the reducer must produce outputs with the same key as the reducer input, and by allowing pass-through outputs. Thus, any given MSCR may include multiple, parallel map operations that each operate on different inputs and multiple reduce operations that operate on the outputs of the map operations to produce multiple different outputs. Despite its apparent greater expressiveness, each MSCR operation can be implemented using a single mapreduce operation that includes a single map function to implement the map operations on the different inputs and a single reduce function to implement the reduce operations to produce the multiple outputs.

Once the execution plan is revised by the optimizer 308, the executor 310 executes the revised execution plan dataflow graph. In one implementation, the pipeline library 300 performs batch execution. In other words, the executor 310 traverses the operations in the revised execution plan in forward topological order, and executes each one in turn. Independent operations may be able to be executed simultaneously. Alternatively, incremental or continuous execution of pipelines may be implemented, where incrementally added inputs lead to quick, incremental update of outputs. Further, optimization may be performed across pipelines run by multiple users over common data sources.

The executor 310 executes operations other than a MSCR by performing the appropriate computations that perform the operation. MSCRs are mapped to a single mapreduce operation, which is then executed.

In some implementations, the executor 310 first decides whether the mapreduce operation should be run locally and sequentially, or as a remote, parallel mapreduce operation (using, for example, mapreduce library 202 b). Since there is overhead in launching a remote, parallel job, local evaluation may be used for modest-size inputs where the gain from parallel processing is outweighed by the start-up overheads. Modest-size data sets may be common during development and testing. Using local evaluation for these data sets may therefore facilitate the use of regular IDEs, debuggers, profilers, and related tools, easing the task of developing programs that include data-parallel computations.

If the input data set appears large (e.g., greater than or equal 64 Megabytes), the executor 310 may choose to launch a remote, parallel MapReduce operation using the mapreduce library 202 b. The executor 310 may use observations of the input data sizes and estimates of the output data sizes to automatically choose a reasonable number of parallel worker machines. Users can assist in estimating output data sizes, for example by augmenting a DoFn with a method that returns the expected ratio of output data size to input data size, based on the computation represented by that DoFn. Estimates may be refined through dynamic monitoring and feedback of observed output data sizes. Relatively more parallel workers may be allocated to jobs that have a higher ratio of CPU to I/O.

The executor 310 may automatically create temporary files to hold the outputs of each operation executed. Once the pipeline is completed, all of these temporary files may be automatically deleted. Alternatively, or additionally, some or all of these temporary files may be deleted as soon as they are no longer needed later in the pipeline.

In general, the pipeline library 300 may be designed to make building and running pipelines feel as similar as possible to running a regular program in the native language for which the pipeline library was designed. When the native language is Java®, using local, sequential evaluation for modest-sized inputs is one way to do so. Another way is by automatically routing any output to System.out or System.err from within a user's DoFn, such as debugging prints, from the corresponding remote MapReduce worker to the main program's output streams. Likewise, any exceptions thrown within a DoFn running on a remote MapReduce worker are captured, sent to the main program, and rethrown.

The library 300 may support a cached execution mode. In this mode, rather than recompute an operation, the executor 310 first attempts to reuse the result of that operation from the previous run, if it was saved in a (internal or user-visible) file and if the executor 310 determines that the operation's result hasn't changed. An operation's result may be considered unchanged if (a) the operation's inputs haven't changed, and (b) the operation's code and captured state haven't changed. The executor 310 may perform an automatic, conservative analysis to identify when reuse of previous results is guaranteed to be safe. Caching can lead to quick edit-compile-run-debug cycles, even for pipelines that would normally take hours to run. This may reduce the amount of time required to find a bug in a late pipeline stage, fix the program, and then reexecute the revised pipeline from scratch.

FIG. 4A is a flow chart illustrating an example of a process 400 that may be performed by the evaluator 306, the optimizer 308, and the executor 310. Based on a data parallel pipeline that includes multiple parallel data objects and multiple parallel data operations that operate on the objects, the evaluator 306 generates a dataflow graph of deferred parallel data objects and deferred parallel operations corresponding to the data parallel pipeline (402). As described above, a deferred parallel data object is one that has not yet been computed and a deferred parallel operation is one that has not been executed. For example, as a parallel data object is encountered in the data parallel pipeline, the evaluator 306 may generate a data structure that holds a pointer to the parallel data operation that operates on the parallel data object. Similarly, as a parallel data operation is encountered, the evaluator 306 may generate a data structure that holds a pointer to a parallel data object that is an input to the deferred parallel operation and a pointer to a deferred parallel object that is an output of the deferred parallel operation.

Once the evaluator 306 has generated the dataflow graph, the optimizer 308 applies one or more graph transformations to the dataflow graph to generate a revised dataflow graph that includes the deferred parallel data objects (or a subset) and the deferred, combined parallel data operations (404). The deferred, combined parallel data operations may include one or more generalized mapreduce operations (for example, an MSCR), which includes multiple map operations and multiple reduce operations, but is translatable to a single mapreduce operation that includes a single map function to implement the map operations and a single reduce function to implement the reduce operations.

In one implementation, the optimizer 308 performs a series of passes over the dataflow graph, applying the following graph transformations or annotations in the following order: (1) sink flattens; (2) lift CombineValues operations; (3) insert fusion blocks; (4) fuse ParallelDos; and (5) fuse MSCRs.

The sink flattens transformation involves pushing a Flatten operation down through consuming ParallelDo operations by duplicating the ParallelDo before each input to the flatten. In other words, h(f(a)+g(b)) is equivalent to h(f(a))+h(g(b)). This transformation creates opportunities for ParallelDo fusion (described below).

The lift CombineValues operations annotation involves marking certain CombineValues operations for treatment as ParallelDos for ParallelDo fusion. If a CombineValues operation immediately follows a GroupByKey operation, the GroupByKey records that fact. The original CombineValues is left in place, and is henceforth treated as a normal ParallelDo operation and subject to ParallelDo fusion.

The insert fusion blocks annotation involves annotating the ParallelDos connecting two GroupByKey operations. If two GroupByKey operations are connected by a chain of one or more ParallelDo operations, the optimizer 308 chooses which ParallelDos should fuse up into the output channel of the earlier GroupByKey, and which should fuse down into the input channel of the later GroupByKey. The optimizer estimates the size of the intermediate PCollections along the chain of ParallelDos, identifies one with minimal expected size, and marks that intermediate PCollection as a boundary blocking ParallelDo fusion (that is, marks the ParallelDos on either side of that PCollection as not being subject to fusion into one another).

The fuse ParallelDos transformation involves fusing ParallelDos together. One type of ParallelDo fusion that the optimizer 306 may perform is referred to as producer-consumer fusion. If one ParallelDo operation performs function ƒ, and the result is consumed by another ParallelDo operation that performs function g, the two ParallelDo operations may be replaced by a single ParallelDo that computes both ƒ and g·ƒ If the result of the ƒ ParallelDo is not needed by other operations in the graph, fusion has rendered it unnecessary, and the code to produce it may be removed as dead.

Another type of ParallelDo fusion is referred to as sibling fusion. ParallelDo sibling fusion may be applied when two or more ParallelDo operations read the same input PCollection. The ParallelDo operations can be fused into a single multi-output ParallelDo operation that computes the results of all the fused operations in a single pass over the input. Both producer-consumer and sibling fusion can apply to arbitrary trees of multi-output ParallelDo operations.

As mentioned earlier, CombineValues operations are special cases of ParallelDo operations that can be repeatedly applied to partially computed results. As such, ParallelDo fusion may also be applied to CombineValues operations.

The fuse MSCRs transformation involves creating MSCR operations. An MSCR operation starts from a set of related GroupByKey operations. GroupByKey operations may be considered related if the operations consume (possibly via Flatten operations) the same input or inputs created by the same ParallelDo operations. The MSCR's input and output channels are derived from the related GroupByKey operations and the adjacent operations in the execution plan. Each ParallelDo operation with at least one output consumed by one of the GroupByKey operations (possibly via Flatten operations) is fused into the MSCR, forming a new input channel. Any other inputs to the GroupByKeys also form new input channels with identity mappers. Each of the related GroupByKey operations starts an output channel. If a GroupByKey's result is consumed solely by a CombineValues operation, that operation is fused into the corresponding output channel. Similarly, if the GroupByKey's or fused CombineValues's result is consumed solely by a ParallelDo operation, that operation is also fused into the output channel, if it cannot be fused into a different MSCR's input channel. All the PCollections internal to the fused ParallelDo, GroupByKey, and CombineValues operations are now unnecessary and may be deleted. Finally, each output of a mapper ParallelDo that flows to an operation or output other than one of the related GroupByKeys generates its own pass-through output channel.

After all GroupByKey operations have been transformed into MSCR operations, any remaining ParallelDo operations are also transformed into trivial MSCR operations with a single input channel containing the ParallelDo and an identity output channel. The final optimized execution plan contains only MSCR, Flatten, and Operate operations.

Once the revised dataflow graph is generated, the executor 310 executes the deferred, combined parallel operations to produce materialized parallel data objects corresponding to the deferred parallel data objects (406). Executing the generalized mapreduce operation (for example, MSCR) can include translating the generalized mapreduce operation to the single mapreduce operation and executing the single mapreduce operation. Before executing the single mapreduce operation, the executor 310 may decide whether to execute the single mapreduce operation as a local, sequential operation or a remote, parallel operation and then execute the single mapreduce accordingly. For example, the executor 310 may decide based on the size of the input data set, as described above.

FIG. 4B is a flow chart illustrating an example of a process 450 that may be performed by the executor 310 of the pipeline library 202 c to execute the revised dataflow graph. The executor 310 accesses the revised data flow graph (452) and begins traversing the data flow graph, for example, in a forward topological manner (454). As described above, in other implementations, the executor 310 may support incremental or continuous execution of pipelines.

As the executor 310 encounters non-MSCR operations (456), the executor 310 executes those operations locally using logic included in the pipeline library 202 c (458). On the other hand, when the executor 310 encounters an MSCR operation (456), the executor 310 determines whether to execute the MSCR as a local, sequential operation or, instead, as a remote, parallel operation using the mapreduce library 202 b (460). For example, the executor 310 may determine an estimated size of data associated with the MSCR and determine whether the estimated size exceeds a threshold size. If the estimated size is below the threshold size, executor 310 may execute the MSCR as a local, sequential operation (462). Conversely, if the estimated size is equal to or exceeds the threshold size, the executor 310 may execute the MSCR operation as remote, parallel operation by translating the MSCR into a single mapreduce operation and executing that mapreduce operation as a remote, parallel operation using the mapreduce library 202 c (464).

For instance, in one implementation, the executor estimates the size of the input data for each input channel of the MSCR, estimates the size of the intermediary data produced by each input channel, and estimates the size of the output data from each output channel. If any of these size estimates is equal to or exceeds 64 megabytes (MB), then the MSCR is executed as a remote, parallel operation using the mapreduce library 202 b (464).

When executing the MSCR as a local, sequential operation, the executor 310 may perform the appropriate operations over the data is a sequential fashion. For example, the executor may implement in-memory for-loops to access the data and perform the appropriate operations on the data.

When executing the MSCR as a remote, parallel operation using the mapreduce library 202 b, the executor 310 may estimate the number of map worker processes and reduce worker processes needed to perform the associated processing based on the configuration of the input and output channels of the MSCR. For instance, the executor may estimate the number of map worker processes for each input channel based, for example, on an estimated or known size of the input data for each input channel and, similarly, may estimate the number of reduce worker processes based, for example, on an estimated or known amount of data to be processed by each output channel. The executor 310 may then add up the number of map worker processes and reduce worker processes and cause these worker processes to be invoked using the mapreduce library 202 b.

Each map worker and each reduce worker is given an index number. For example, if the MSCR includes two input channels, one with 4 map worker processes and the other with 5 map worker processes, then the 9 workers may be given an index number from 1 to 9. The same may occur for the reduce worker processes. These index numbers are used to associate a given map worker process or reduce worker process with a particular input or output channel, respectively. Continuing the foregoing example, index numbers 1-4 may be associated with the first input channel, while index numbers 5-9 may be associated with the second input channel.

The executor 310 also translates the MSCR into a single mapreduce operation by generating a single map function that implements the multiple map operations in the input channels of the MSCR and a single reduce function that implements the multiple reduce operations in the output channels of the MSCR. The map function uses the index of the map worker processes as the basis for selecting which map operation is applied to the input. For example, an if-then statement may be included as part of the map function, with the index numbers of the map workers being the decision points for the if-then statement.

Thus, as the mapreduce library 202 b assigns a map task to a map worker process, the worker's associated index is passed into the map function, along with an identity of the file to be worked on. The index number then dictates which map operation (parallelDo) the map function invokes on the elements in the file and, thereby, which input channel the worker implements.

Similarly, the reduce function uses the index of the reduce worker processes as the basis for selecting which reduce operation is applied to the input of the reduce worker process. As a reduce worker function is assigned a reduce task, the worker's associated index is passed into the reduce function, along with an identity of the file to be worked on (which contains a single flattened stream of key-grouped inputs). The index number then dictates which reduce operation the reduce function invokes on the elements in the file and, thereby, which output channel the worker implements. If the reduce worker process implements a grouping output channel, the reduce worker process performs the CombineValues “combine” operation (if any), and then the ParallelDo “reduce” operation. If the reduce worker process implements a pass-through output channel, the reduce worker process performs an ungrouping operation that outputs key/value pairs, undoing the effect of the mapreduce library's implicit shuffle.

Each of the MSCR operation's input channels can emit key/value pairs to any of its R output channels. For example, input channel 2 sends one output to output channel 1 and another output to output channel 3, and nothing to output channel 2.

The mapreduce library 202 b handles the shuffle on the data output by the map worker processes and then routes the output to the correct reducer worker. Each of the MSCR operation's input channels can emit key/value pairs to any of its R output channels. For example, input channel 2 sends one output to output channel 1 and another output to output channel 3, and nothing to output channel 2. This is handled, for example, by the pipeline library 202 c by using an emitToShard(key, value, shardNum) primitive in the mapreduce library 202 b, which allows the pipeline library 202 c to designate which reduce worker process a given output of a map worker process is sent to. When sending an output from a given map worker process to a particular output channel, the pipeline library 202 c may compute the range of reduce worker indices corresponding to that output channel, chooses one of them using a deterministic function, and uses the emitToShard function to send the output to the chosen reducer worker. The deterministic function may include a hash on the key associated with the output values, with the result of the hash determining which of the reduce worker processes within the range of indices for the output is chosen. This may ensure that all of the data associated with a particular key is sent to the same reduce worker process.

In one implementation, the mapreduce library 202 b only directly supports writing to a single output. Moreover, in one implementation of the mapreduce library 202 b, if the reduce function's output expects key/value pairs, the keys written to this output must be the same as the keys passed in to the reduce function. In contrast, in an implementation, each MSCR output channel can write to zero, one, or several outputs, with no constraints on keys. To implement these more-flexible outputs, the reduce function may write directly to the outputs, bypassing the mapreduce library's normal output mechanism. If any of the MSCR's outputs satisfies the restrictions of a mapreduce library's output, then that output can instead be implemented using the mapreduce library's normal mechanisms.

As each of the parallel operations is evaluated, the executor 310 populates the deferred objects with the appropriate data to materialize the objects (466) until all operations are completed, at which time the executor 310 returns control back over to the application 202 a (468).

FIG. 5 shows an example execution plan transformation that illustrates ParallelDo producer-consumer fusion and sibling fusion. Graph 502 illustrates the original graph that includes ParallelDo operations A 504, B 506, C 508, and D 510. As shown, ParallelDo operations A 504, B 506, C 508, and D 510 are fused into a single ParallelDo A+B+C+D 512 to form graph 550. The new ParallelDo in graph 550 creates all the leaf outputs from the original graph 502, plus output A.1 514, since output A.1 514 is needed by some other operation Op 518. Intermediate output A.0 516 is no longer needed and is fused away in graph 550.

FIGS. 6A and 6B show an example execution plan transformation 600 that illustrates MSCR fusion. Graph 601 illustrates the original graph that includes three GroupByKey operations, GBK1 602, GBK2 604, and GBK3 606. In this example, all three GroupByKey operations 602, 604, 606 are related, and hence seed a single MSCR operation as shown in revised graph 650. Referring to graph 601, GBK1 602 is related to GBK2 604 because they both consume outputs of ParallelDo M2 608. GBK2 604 is related to GBK3 606 because they both consume PCollection M4.0 612. The PCollection M2.0 is needed by later operations other than GBK1 602, as designated by the star. Similarly, the PCollection M4.1 is needed by later operations other than those operations forming the MSCR operation.

Referring to graph 650, the ParallelDos M2 608, M3 614, and M4 612 are incorporated as MSCR input channels 616. Each of the GroupByKey 602, 604, 606 operations becomes a grouping output channel 620. GBK2's output channel incorporates the CV2 CombineValues operation 622 and the R2 ParallelDo operation 624. The R3 ParallelDo 626 operation is also fused into an output channel. An additional identity input channel is created for the input to GBK1 from non-ParallelDo Op1. Two additional pass-through output channels (shown as edges from mappers to outputs) are created for the M2.0 and M4.1 PCollections that are used after the MSCR operation. The resulting MSCR operation 650 a has 4 input channels 616 and 5 output channels 620.

FIGS. 7A-7E illustrate an example of a dataflow graph transformation performed, for example, by optimizer 306.

FIG. 7A illustrates the initial parallel data pipeline 700. For simplicity, the parallel data objects are not shown. This pipeline takes four different input sources and writes two outputs. Input1 is processed by parallelDo( ) A 702. Input2 is processed by parallelDo( ) B 704, and Input3 is processed by parallelDo( ) C 706. The results of these two operations are flatten( )ed 708 together and fed into parallelDo( ) D 710. Input4 is counted using the count( ) derived operation 712, and the result is further processed by parallelDo( ) E 714. The results of parallelDo( )s A, D, and E 702, 710, 714 are joined together using the join( ) 716 derived operation. The result of the join( ) 716 is processed further by parallelDo( ) F 718. Finally, the results of parallelDo( )s A and F 702 and 718 are written out to external files.

FIG. 7B illustrates the initial dataflow graph 720, which is constructed from calls to primitives like parallelDo( ) and flatten( ), and derived operations like count( ) and join( ), which are themselves implemented by calls to lower-level operations. In this example, the count( ) call expands into ParallelDo C:Map 722, GroupByKey C:GBK 724, and CombineValues C:CV 726, and the join( ) call expands into ParallelDo operations J:Tag1 726, J:Tag2 728, and J:Tag3 730 to tag each of the N input collections, Flatten J:Fltn 732, GroupByKey J:GBK 734, and ParallelDo J:Untag 736 to process the results.

FIG. 7C shows a revised dataflow graph 738 that results from a sink flattens transformation being applied to graph 720. The Flatten operation Fltn 708 is pushed down through consuming ParallelDo operations D 710 and JTag:2 728.

FIG. 7D shows a revised dataflow graph 740 that results from a ParallelDo fusion transformation being applied to graph 738. Both producer-consumer and sibling fusion are applied to adjacent ParallelDo operations to produce ParallelDo operations 760, 762, 764, 766, and 768.

FIG. 7E shows the final, revised dataflow graph 748 that results from a MSCR fusion transformation being applied to graph 740. GroupByKey operation C:GBK 724 and surrounding ParallelDo operations (C:Map 722 and C:CV 726) are fused into a first MSCR operation 750. GroupByKey operations J:GBK 734 becomes the core operation of a second MSCR operation 752 and is included in a grouping output channel. The second MSCR operation 752 also includes the remaining ParallelDo operations 770, 762, 764, and 766 in a respective input channel, and a pass through output channel 744. The original execution plan had 16 data-parallel operations (ParallelDos, GroupByKeys, and CombineValues). The final plan has two MSCR operations.

While described as implemented as a library, the functionality of the pipeline library 202 c may, additionally or alternatively, be implemented as a service that allows a client system to access the functionality over a network, such as the Internet. For instance, the functionality of the pipeline library 202 c can be implemented on a server system as a Web Service with a corresponding set of Web Service Application Programming Interfaces (APIs). The Web Service APIs may be implemented, for example, as a Representational State Transfer (REST)-based HTTP interface or a Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP)-based interface. Alternatively, or additionally, an interface, such as a web page, may be provided to access the service over the network.

Using the API or interface, a user may send a program developed by the user to the service from a client system. The program, for example, may include a data parallel pipeline implemented using the parallel collection classes 302 and parallel operations 304. Using the API or interface, the user may designate data for the pipeline and send a message to the service to execute the program. The message optionally may include any arguments needed for the program. Once the message is received, the service executes the program and implements the functionality of the evaluator 306, the optimizer 308, and the executor 310 to implement the data parallel pipeline. The service then may return any outputs of the program to the client system. Alternatively, or additionally, the user program may execute on the client system, with the program using the API to implement the data parallel pipeline using the functionality of the evaluator 306, the optimizer 308, and the executor 310 implemented by the service.

FIG. 9 illustrates an example of a system 900 that may be used to implement the pipeline library 202 c as a service (otherwise referred to as a pipeline processing service). In general, the architecture used to implement the pipeline processing service in system 900 provides a secure environment that allows the untrusted code of an external developer's program to run securely within the data center used to implement the pipeline processing service. This may be used, for example, when the entity operating the data center makes the pipeline processing service available to third party developers that are not employed by or otherwise affiliated with or controlled by the entity.

As described more fully below, in the implementation illustrated in FIG. 9, the untrusted data-parallel processing code is broken into two logical pieces and each piece is isolated to run inside of a secured processing environment (a “sandbox” or “jail”). One piece is the executable code that defines the user's data parallel computation (from which the dataflow graph is built), and the other piece is the executable code that contains the functions that operate on the data.

For instance, each piece of untrusted code may run in a hardware virtual machine (VM) that runs a guest operating system and emulates network and disk connections. The hardware VM may prevent the untrusted code from accessing the host or native environment directly, and may provide communication outside the virtual machine only through specific audited mechanisms. The hardware VM may prevent the user's code from having access to the details of how data is stored and transmitted within the data center.

This architecture may allow the untrusted code to run on top of the data center infrastructure, which provides the native processing environment. The file system and interconnection network used to store and move data within the data center may be able to run at full speed, with the untrusted code for consuming the data running inside the security sandbox, which may slow the untrusted code down. In some cases, the bulk of the time spent performing data parallel computations is occupied by moving data. In this case, the execution of the code may experience only a modest degradation in overall execution time compared to running directly in the native processing environment provided by the data center infrastructure. Placing only the untrusted code inside a security sandbox may be more efficient, in some instances, than placing the code and the implementation of the file system and network inside the sandbox. Placing only the untrusted code inside the sandbox may also make the overall system easier to secure, since there's a limited channel for the untrusted code to communicate with the trusted host, in contrast to the much wider communication channels that may be used to support the whole file system and network inside the sandbox.

The system 900 includes a client system 902 and a data center 904, which may be similar to data center 100. The client system 902 and the data center 904 can communicate with one another over a network 906, such as the Internet. The client system 902 stores a user program or application 908 that includes a data parallel pipeline implemented, for example, using the parallel data collection classes 302 and one or more parallel operations 304 described above, which are supported by the pipeline processing service provided by the data center 904. As described further below, the user application 908 can be uploaded to, and executed by, the data center 904.

The data center 904 includes processing modules 910, 912, and 914 that are similar to processing module 104 and include a variety of computer-related components, such as memory 202, CPU(s) 204, and network interface 206, to perform data processing. The data center 904 also includes an externally accessible storage 916.

Processing module(s) 910 implement a service interface 918 that provides the mechanisms for the client system 902 to interact with the pipeline processing service. For instance, the service interface 918 may provide an API for interacting with the service. As described above, such an API may be implemented, for example, as a Representational State Transfer (REST)-based HTTP interface or a Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP)-based interface. Alternatively, or additionally, the service interface 918 may provide a user interface, such as a web page, that can be displayed on the client system 902 and used to access the service. The API or user interface can be used by a user of the client system to, for example, upload the user application 908 to the data center 904, designate data (for example, stored by storage 916) for the user program 908, and send a message to the service to execute the program 908, with message optionally including any arguments needed for the program 908.

Processing module(s) 912 implement an execution plan service 920 and a virtual machine 922. The virtual machine 922 may be a hardware virtual machine that runs a guest operating system and emulates network and disk connections. For example, the virtual machine 922 may be implemented by the “Kernel Virtual Machine” (KVM) technology, which virtualizes Linux on an x86 architecture, and may be run as a user process on the trusted host data center. KVM is described, for example, in the KVM Whitepaper, available at http://www.redhat.com/f/pdf/rhev/DOC-KVM.pdf. In other implementations, the virtual machine 922 may be implemented as a process virtual machine. In general, a process virtual machine runs as an application in an operating system, supports a single process, and provides a platform independent processing environment.

The virtual machine 922 hosts (and executes) the uploaded user program 908 and an execution plan library 924. When the user program 908 is executed, the execution plan library 924 builds a dataflow graph based on the parallel data objects and parallel operations that form the pipeline in the user program 906. To that end, the execution plan library 924 implements an evaluator 926, which, similarly to evaluator 306, constructs an internal execution plan dataflow graph of deferred objects and deferred operations corresponding to the data parallel pipeline. In addition to implementing the evaluator 926, the execution plan library 924 may implement other functions to communicate a representation of the dataflow graph to the execution plan service 920. For example, in one implementation, the execution plan library 924 includes functions to communicate across the virtual machine boundary to the execution plan service 920 using a remote procedure call (RPC). These calls may be monitored to insure that appropriate calls are made. For instance, the execution plan service 920 may check the arguments to a given function for validity, and check the function calls against a white list of function calls that are permitted. The auditing may be performed to detect, for example, requests (probes) to services or other data center resources (e.g., files or other RPC based services) that are not allowed to be accessed by the untrusted code.

In some implementations, the virtual machine 922 may be configured such that these RPC calls are the only way for code inside the virtual machine to interact with environments outside the virtual machine 922. The execution plan library 926 also may implement functions to receive information enabling materialization of the objects (for example, versions of the materialized objects themselves or representations of the materialized objects) from the execution plan service 920 once the dataflow graph has been optimized and executed. The execution plan library 922 then may use this information to materialize the data objects in the internal dataflow graph so that those materialized objects may be used by the user program 906.

The execution plan service 920 handles the optimization and execution of the data flow graph sent from the execution plan library 924. In one implementation, the execution plan service 920 is a trusted process that does not execute any untrusted user code and that has full access to the data center infrastructure. The execution plan service 920 accepts the information representing an untrusted execution plan and validates the graph structure. The execution plan service 920 then handles optimizations of the graph (that is, applies graph transforms as described above) and execution of the optimized graph.

To handle the optimizations, the execution plan service 920 implements an optimizer 928. The optimizer 928, like optimizer 308, applies graph transformations, such as those described above, to generate a revised dataflow graph that includes the deferred parallel data objects (or a subset) and deferred, combined parallel data operations, which may include MSCRs. In one implementation, the optimizer 928, like optimizer 308, performs a series of passes over the initial execution plan that reduces the number of overall operations and groups operations, with the overall goal of producing the fewest MSCR operations.

To handle executing the revised data flow graph, the execution plan service 920 implements an executor 930. If the revised data flow graph includes operations in the dataflow graph that are not MSCRs (for example, PObject operate functions), then the executor 930 may communicate with a virtual machine, such as virtual machine 922, to implement the untrusted operations in a JVM within the virtual machine.

For MSCRs, the executor 930, like executor 310, translates a given MSCR in the graph into a single mapreduce operation. To do so for a given MSCR, for example, the executor 930 generates a single map function that implements the multiple map operations in the input channels of the MSCR and a single reduce function that implements the multiple reduce operations in the output channels of the MSCR. The executor 930 then executes the single mapreduce operation as a remote, parallel operation. For instance, similarly to the example described with reference to FIG. 4B, the executor 930 may cause a number of map workers and reduce workers to be invoked with an associated index number that controls the data each receives and which of the map or reduce operations each performs on the data.

Processing module(s) 914 implements a given one of the map or reduce workers (one copy may be designated as a master, which coordinates the various worker copies) and an associated virtual machine 934. Generally, in one implementation, the untrusted user functions (e.g., the map or reduce operations in the single map or reduce function) are only executed in the virtual machine 934, while the worker 932 is a trusted process that does not execute any untrusted user code and has full access to the data center infrastructure. That is, rather than each worker 932 directly executing the code in the single map function or the single reduce function, these functions (which contain the untrusted user code 936) are executed in the virtual machine 934. The trusted worker 932 generally handles the interaction with the rest of infrastructure, including data access (including external data storage access) and communication and coordination with masters and other workers.

Like virtual machine 922, virtual machine 934 may be a hardware virtual machine and may be implemented using KVM technology. In other implementations, the virtual machine 934 may be implemented as a process virtual machine. Other processing modules may implement the other parallel workers and associated virtual machines.

In addition to hosting (and executing) the user functions 936, the virtual machine 934 also hosts and executes an unbatcher/batcher process 938, which is used to handle input and output data for the user functions 936. In general, the input and output data is passed between the worker 932 and the virtual machine 934 as batches of records. For instance, rather than passing each record to the virtual machine 934 for delivery to the user functions, the worker 932 accesses the input data (for example, stored in storage 916), extracts batches of records from the input, and sends the input batch of records to the unbatcher/batcher 938 in the virtual machine 934 using, for example, an RPC. In one example, the worker 932 is configured to extract 64 MB of records, and send those records to the unbatcher/batcher 938.

The unbatcher/batcher 938 is configured to break the batch up into individual records, invoke the user functions 936, and pass the individual records to the user functions 936 for processing. The unbatcher/batcher 938 is also configured to collect the output of the user functions 938 into an output batch of records, and communicate the output batch to the worker 932, which can then arrange to have the results written to an output file or files that can be accessed by, for example, the execution plan service 920 or other components of system 900. The execution plan service 920 may be responsible for communicating the results back to the user program 908 through the execute plan library 922. Passing the inputs and outputs between the worker and the virtual machine 934 in batches may reduce the impact of the processing overhead needed to cross the virtual machine boundary (for example, the overhead needed to implement an RPC).

As with the RPCs between the execution plan service 920 and the execution plan library 926, the RPC calls between the worker 932 and the unbatcher/batcher 938 may be monitored to ensure that appropriate calls are made. In some implementations, the virtual machine 934 may be configured such that these RPC calls are the only way for code inside the virtual machine to interact with environments outside the virtual machine 934.

While the implementation shown includes unbatcher/batcher 938 and the sending of records and results across the virtual machine boundary in batches, other implementations may not perform batching to communicate across the virtual machine boundary.

The externally accessible storage 916 may be configured as a hosted storage service that is accessible to the client system 902 such that the client system can store data, such as input data for the user program 908, in storage 916 and/or retrieve output data from the user program 908. For instance, the storage 916 can be implemented as a Web Service with a corresponding set of Web Service APIs. The Web Service APIs may be implemented, for example, as a Representational State Transfer (REST)-based HTTP interface or a Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP)-based interface. In a REST-based interface, a data object is accessed as a resource, uniquely named using a URI, and the client system 908 and storage 916 exchange representations of resource state using a defined set of operations. For example, requested actions can be represented as verbs, such as by HTTP GET, PUT, POST, HEAD, and DELETE verbs. While shown as part of data center 904, the storage 916 may be implemented by a separate data center or other facility.

In one implementation, the results of the user program 908 are stored in a file in the storage 916. The filename of the file may be designated by the execution plan service 920 or specified in the user program 908. Once the user program 908 has completed execution and the results are stored in the storage 916, an indication of the successful execution may be sent back to the client system 902 and may optionally include the filename (for instance, if the filename is generated by the execution plan service 920 or otherwise not known to the client system 902). The client system 902 then may use the filename and APIs to retrieve the results.

FIG. 10 is a flow chart illustrating an example of a process 1000 for executing an untrusted application that includes a data parallel pipeline. The process 1000 is described below in the context of system 900, although other systems or system configurations may implement the process 900. In addition, the following describes an example that uses the Java® programming language to implement the user program 908 (including the user functions 936), the execution plan library 924, and the unbatcher/batcher 938. In general, Java® programs are run in a virtual machine so as to be compatible with various processing hardware. The use of a virtual machine to run the Java® bytecode may provide an additional layer of security for the untrusted user code by causing the untrusted code to be run in multiple layers of virtual machines. The innermost virtual machine is the Java® VM used to run the Java® bytecode. The next virtual machine is the hardware virtual machine that runs a guest operating system and emulates network and disk connections.

To begin, the untrusted application is received at the data center 904 (1002). For example, an untrusted user uploads the user program 908 (expressed as a Java® .jar file) to the service interface 918 using, for instance, the provided API or interface. Also using the API or interface, the user then instructs the service interface 910 to start the user program 908 running with some arguments controlling the run. For example, the arguments may designate specific input files in the storage 916.

A first virtual machine is instantiated (1004). For instance, the service interface 910 instantiates a slave hardware virtual machine 922, for example, using the KVM technology. The service interface 910 populates the virtual machine's (virtual) local disk with the Java® runtime (including Java® VM), the user's .jar file (the user program 908), the execution plan library .jar file, and any other standard .jar files and other data files used to implement the user program 908 and the execution plan library 926.

The untrusted application is then executed in the first virtual machine (1006). For instance, the service interface 918 may start up a Java® VM and execute the user's untrusted program 906 in the Java® VM (which is in the virtual machine 922). The user's untrusted program invokes the execution plan library 924 such that the evaluator 926 builds a dataflow graph in the memory of the virtual machine 922 based on the parallel data objects and parallel operations that form the pipeline in the user program 908.

Information representing the data flow graph is communicated outside of the first virtual machine (1008). For instance, the execution plan library 924 builds a representation of the data flow graph, and communicates the representation to the execution plan service 920 using an RPC call.

Outside of the first virtual machine, one or more graph transformations are applied to the information representing the dataflow graph to generate a revised dataflow graph that includes one or more of the deferred parallel data objects and deferred, combined parallel data operations (1010). For instance, the execution plan service 920 accepts the representation of the data flow graph and validates the graph structure. The optimizer 928 performs optimizations of the graph to generate a revised dataflow graph that includes the deferred parallel data objects (or a subset) and deferred, combined parallel data operations, which may include MSCRs.

The deferred, combined parallel operations are then executed to produce materialized parallel data objects corresponding to the deferred parallel data objects (1012). To that end, for instance, the executor 930 translates the MSCRs in the graphs into a single mapreduce operation, which includes a single map function that implements the multiple map operations and a single reduce function that implements the multiple reduce operations. The executor 930 then executes the single mapreduce operation as a remote, parallel operation, which results in a number of parallel map workers and reduce workers 932 being invoked and passed the single map or reduce functions as well as an indication of the appropriate input file(s). One of the workers is designated as a master, which coordinates the activity of the other workers.

One or more second virtual machines are then instantiated for the untrusted user functions. For example, a given invoked worker 932 instantiates a slave hardware virtual machine 934 and populates the virtual machine's local disk with the Java® runtime (including Java® VM), a copy of the single map or reduce function, the unbatcher/batcher code, and any other standard .jar files and other data files needed to implement the user functions 936 and unbatcher/batcher 938. The worker 932 starts up a Java® VM in the virtual machine 934, and runs the unbatcher/batcher 938 in the Java® VM. The unbatcher/batcher 938 controls the invocation of the user functions 936 in the Java® VM.

Once the virtual machine 934 is instantiated, and the unbatcher/batcher 938 is running, the worker 932 accesses an input file from the storage 916. The worker extracts a batch of records from the input file, and sends the input batch of records to the unbatcher/batcher 938 inside the VM 934 using an RPC. The unbatcher/batcher 938 breaks up the input batch into individual records, invokes the user's function to process each record in turn, collects the output records into an output batch, and finally communicates the output batch back to the worker 932 in a reply to the RPC.

Once the worker 932 receives the output batch, the worker 932 arranges to have the results written to an output file or files that can be accessed by, for example, the execution plan library 922 or other components of system 900. Based on the output files, the execution plan service 920 generates information enabling materialization of the objects, such as materialized versions of the objects or representations of the materialized objects. The execution plan service 920 then communicates this information to the execution plan library 922. The execution plan library 922 uses this information to materialize the data objects in the internal dataflow graph so that those materialized objects may be used by the user program 906.

In one implementation, once the user program 906 finishes running, the outputs or results of the user program 906 are communicated to the service interface 918. The service interface 918 then communicates the outputs directly to the client system.

Alternatively, or additionally, the outputs or results may be stored in a file in the storage 916 so as to be made accessible to the client system 902. In this case, for example, the filename of the file may be designated by the execution plan service 920 and provided to the client system 902 with an indication that the user program 908 successfully executed. The client system 902 then may use the filename to retrieve the results. In another example, the user program 908 may designate the filename and an indication of the successful execution of the user program 908 may be sent to the client system 902 without the filename. However, because the filename was designated by the user program 908, the client system 902 may have access to the filename and be able to retrieve the results.

Using the virtual machines to implement the untrusted user code may provide a heterogeneous “defense in depth” strategy. To compromise the underlying data center, nefarious untrusted code must penetrate several audited barriers. For instance, when a hardware virtual machine is used, the untrusted code must compromise the standard process model implemented by the guest operating system on the hardware virtual machine, and gain “root” access in the guest. The untrusted code must then compromise the sandbox provided by the emulator of the virtual machine. In addition, when a programming language that also employs a virtual machine for the runtime is employed, the untrusted code must first compromise the innermost virtual machine.

While the architecture shown segregates the user program into a sandboxed area in the data center, other processing environments with controlled access to the data center infrastructure may be used. For example, in other implementations, the user program may execute on client system 908. A library on the client system 908, similar to the execution plan library 924, may generate a data flow graph and communicate a representation of the data flow graph to the execution plan service 920, either directly or through the service interface 918. The execution plan service 920 can then validate the data flow graph, create a revised graph, and execute the revised graph as described above, with the user functions still being executed in a virtual machine 934 or other sandbox to prevent direct access by the user functions to the underlying data center infrastructure.

The techniques described above are not limited to any particular hardware or software configuration. Rather, they may be implemented using hardware, software, or a combination of both. The methods and processes described may be implemented as computer programs that are executed on programmable computers comprising at least one processor and at least one data storage system. The programs may be implemented in a high-level programming language and may also be implemented in assembly or other lower level languages, if desired.

Any such program will typically be stored on a computer-usable storage medium or device (e.g., CD-Rom, RAM, or magnetic disk). When read into the processor of the computer and executed, the instructions of the program cause the programmable computer to carry out the various operations described above.

A number of implementations have been described. Nevertheless, it will be understood that various modifications may be. Accordingly, other implementations are within the scope of the following claims. 

1. (canceled)
 2. A computer-implemented method comprising: receiving, by a first trusted process a) executing in a first trusted processing environment and b) that manages data access for an untrusted processing environment, a data flow graph for an untrusted application, executing in the untrusted processing environment, that identifies one or more data objects and one or more untrusted functions; and managing, by a second trusted process i) executing in a second trusted processing environment and ii) that manages data access for an untrusted worker environment, execution of the untrusted functions to produce materialized data objects corresponding to the data objects by: determining, by the second trusted process, input data for one of the untrusted functions using the data objects; providing, by the second trusted process to an untrusted worker process in the untrusted worker environment, the input data to cause the untrusted worker process to execute the one of the untrusted functions using the input data; and receiving, by the second trusted process, output data generated by the untrusted worker process using the one of the untrusted functions and the input data.
 3. The method of claim 2 comprising: transforming, by the first trusted process executing in the first trusted processing environment, the data flow graph into a revised data flow graph for the untrusted application, the revised data flow graph including one or more deferred data objects and one or more deferred operations each corresponding to one or more untrusted functions called by the untrusted application, wherein: managing, by the second trusted process i) executing the second trusted processing environment and ii) that manages data access for the untrusted worker environment, execution of the untrusted functions to produce the materialized data objects corresponding to the data objects comprises managing, by the second trusted process, execution of the untrusted functions corresponding to the deferred operations to produce the materialized data objects corresponding to the deferred data objects.
 4. The method of claim 3 wherein: receiving, by the first trusted process a) executing in the first trusted processing environment and b) that manages data access for the untrusted processing environment, the data flow graph for the untrusted application, executing in the untrusted processing environment, that identifies the one or more data objects and the one or more untrusted functions comprises receiving the data flow graph that includes a data parallel pipeline used to produce the data flow graph; transforming, by the first trusted process executing the first trusted processing environment, the data flow graph into a revised data flow graph for the untrusted application comprises transforming the data flow graph into the revised data flow graph that includes one or more deferred data objects and one or more deferred parallel operations each corresponding to one or more untrusted functions called by the untrusted application; and managing, by the second trusted process, execution of the untrusted functions corresponding to the deferred operations to produce the materialized data objects corresponding to the deferred data objects comprises managing execution of the untrusted functions corresponding to the deferred parallel operations to produce materialized parallel data objects corresponding to the deferred data objects.
 5. The method of claim 2 comprising: managing, by the first trusted process, data access for the untrusted application executing on a first virtual machine; and managing, by the second trusted process, data access for the untrusted worker process executing on a second virtual machine.
 6. The method of claim 2 wherein: determining, by the second trusted process, the input data for the one of the untrusted functions using the data objects comprises determining an input batch of records that includes multiple, individual input records; providing, by the second trusted process to the untrusted worker process in the untrusted worker environment, the input data to cause the untrusted worker process to execute the one of the untrusted functions using the input data comprises providing the input batch of records to the untrusted worker process to cause the untrusted worker process to execute the one of the untrusted functions using the input batch of records; and receiving, by the second trusted process, the output data generated by the untrusted worker process using the one of the untrusted functions and the input data comprises collecting output records, received from the untrusted worker process, into an output batch.
 7. The method of claim 2 comprising: receiving, from a client system, a request for execution of the untrusted application; and sending the output data to the client system.
 8. The method of claim 2 wherein receiving, by the first trusted process a) executing in the first trusted processing environment and b) that manages data access for the untrusted processing environment, the data flow graph for the untrusted application comprises receiving, from the untrusted processing environment, a remote procedure call that identifies the data flow graph.
 9. The method of claim 2 comprising determining, by the first trusted process executing in the first trusted processing environment, whether each of the one or more untrusted functions is valid, wherein providing, by the second trusted process to the untrusted worker process in the untrusted worker environment, the input data to cause the untrusted worker process to execute the one of the untrusted functions using the input data is responsive to determining that the one of the untrusted functions is valid.
 10. A non-transitory computer-readable medium storing instructions operable when executed to cause at least one processor to perform operations comprising: receiving, by a first trusted process a) executing in a first trusted processing environment and b) that manages data access for an untrusted processing environment, a data flow graph for an untrusted application, executing in the untrusted processing environment, that identifies one or more data objects and one or more untrusted functions; and managing, by a second trusted process i) executing in a second trusted processing environment and ii) that manages data access for an untrusted worker environment, execution of the untrusted functions to produce materialized data objects corresponding to the data objects by: determining, by the second trusted process, input data for one of the untrusted functions using the data objects; providing, by the second trusted process to an untrusted worker process in the untrusted worker environment, the input data to cause the untrusted worker process to execute the one of the untrusted functions using the input data; and receiving, by the second trusted process, output data generated by the untrusted worker process using the one of the untrusted functions and the input data.
 11. The computer-readable medium of claim 10 the operations comprising: transforming, by the first trusted process executing in the first trusted processing environment, the data flow graph into a revised data flow graph for the untrusted application, the revised data flow graph including one or more deferred data objects and one or more deferred operations each corresponding to one or more untrusted functions called by the untrusted application, wherein: managing, by the second trusted process i) executing the second trusted processing environment and ii) that manages data access for the untrusted worker environment, execution of the untrusted functions to produce the materialized data objects corresponding to the data objects comprises managing, by the second trusted process, execution of the untrusted functions corresponding to the deferred operations to produce the materialized data objects corresponding to the deferred data objects.
 12. The computer-readable medium of claim 11 wherein: receiving, by the first trusted process a) executing in the first trusted processing environment and b) that manages data access for the untrusted processing environment, the data flow graph for the untrusted application, executing in the untrusted processing environment, that identifies the one or more data objects and the one or more untrusted functions comprises receiving the data flow graph that includes a data parallel pipeline used to produce the data flow graph; transforming, by the first trusted process executing the first trusted processing environment, the data flow graph into a revised data flow graph for the untrusted application comprises transforming the data flow graph into the revised data flow graph that includes one or more deferred data objects and one or more deferred parallel operations each corresponding to one or more untrusted functions called by the untrusted application; and managing, by the second trusted process, execution of the untrusted functions corresponding to the deferred operations to produce the materialized data objects corresponding to the deferred data objects comprises managing execution of the untrusted functions corresponding to the deferred parallel operations to produce materialized parallel data objects corresponding to the deferred data objects.
 13. The computer-readable medium of claim 10 the operations comprising: managing, by the first trusted process, data access for the untrusted application executing on a first virtual machine; and managing, by the second trusted process, data access for the untrusted worker process executing on a second virtual machine.
 14. The computer-readable medium of claim 10 wherein: determining, by the second trusted process, the input data for the one of the untrusted functions using the data objects comprises determining an input batch of records that includes multiple, individual input records; providing, by the second trusted process to the untrusted worker process in the untrusted worker environment, the input data to cause the untrusted worker process to execute the one of the untrusted functions using the input data comprises providing the input batch of records to the untrusted worker process to cause the untrusted worker process to execute the one of the untrusted functions using the input batch of records; and receiving, by the second trusted process, the output data generated by the untrusted worker process using the one of the untrusted functions and the input data comprises collecting output records, received from the untrusted worker process, into an output batch.
 15. The computer-readable medium of claim 10 the operations comprising: receiving, from a client system, a request for execution of the untrusted application; and sending the output data to the client system.
 16. The computer-readable medium of claim 10 wherein receiving, by the first trusted process a) executing in the first trusted processing environment and b) that manages data access for the untrusted processing environment, the data flow graph for the untrusted application comprises receiving, from the untrusted processing environment, a remote procedure call that identifies the data flow graph.
 17. The computer-readable medium of claim 10 the operations comprising determining, by the first trusted process executing in the first trusted processing environment, whether each of the one or more untrusted functions is valid, wherein providing, by the second trusted process to the untrusted worker process in the untrusted worker environment, the input data to cause the untrusted worker process to execute the one of the untrusted functions using the input data is responsive to determining that the one of the untrusted functions is valid.
 18. A system comprising one or more computers and one or more storage devices on which are stored instructions that are operable, when executed by the one or more computers, to cause the one or more computers to perform operations comprising: receiving, by a first trusted process a) executing in a first trusted processing environment and b) that manages data access for an untrusted processing environment, a data flow graph for an untrusted application, executing in the untrusted processing environment, that identifies one or more data objects and one or more untrusted functions; and managing, by a second trusted process i) executing in a second trusted processing environment and ii) that manages data access for an untrusted worker environment, execution of the untrusted functions to produce materialized data objects corresponding to the data objects by: determining, by the second trusted process, input data for one of the untrusted functions using the data objects; providing, by the second trusted process to an untrusted worker process in the untrusted worker environment, the input data to cause the untrusted worker process to execute the one of the untrusted functions using the input data; and receiving, by the second trusted process, output data generated by the untrusted worker process using the one of the untrusted functions and the input data.
 19. The system of claim 18 the operations comprising: transforming, by the first trusted process executing in the first trusted processing environment, the data flow graph into a revised data flow graph for the untrusted application, the revised data flow graph including one or more deferred data objects and one or more deferred operations each corresponding to one or more untrusted functions called by the untrusted application, wherein: managing, by the second trusted process i) executing the second trusted processing environment and ii) that manages data access for the untrusted worker environment, execution of the untrusted functions to produce the materialized data objects corresponding to the data objects comprises managing, by the second trusted process, execution of the untrusted functions corresponding to the deferred operations to produce the materialized data objects corresponding to the deferred data objects.
 20. The system of claim 19 wherein: receiving, by the first trusted process a) executing in the first trusted processing environment and b) that manages data access for the untrusted processing environment, the data flow graph for the untrusted application, executing in the untrusted processing environment, that identifies the one or more data objects and the one or more untrusted functions comprises receiving the data flow graph that includes a data parallel pipeline used to produce the data flow graph; transforming, by the first trusted process executing the first trusted processing environment, the data flow graph into a revised data flow graph for the untrusted application comprises transforming the data flow graph into the revised data flow graph that includes one or more deferred data objects and one or more deferred parallel operations each corresponding to one or more untrusted functions called by the untrusted application; and managing, by the second trusted process, execution of the untrusted functions corresponding to the deferred operations to produce the materialized data objects corresponding to the deferred data objects comprises managing execution of the untrusted functions corresponding to the deferred parallel operations to produce materialized parallel data objects corresponding to the deferred data objects.
 21. The system of claim 18 the operations comprising: managing, by the first trusted process, data access for the untrusted application executing on a first virtual machine; and managing, by the second trusted process, data access for the untrusted worker process executing on a second virtual machine. 